The halo masses and galaxy environments of hyperluminous QSOs at z~2.7 in the Keck Baryonic Structure Survey
Ryan F. Trainor, Charles C. Steidel

TL;DR
This study analyzes the environments of hyperluminous QSOs at z~2.7, revealing they reside in typical galaxy groups and their rarity is due to rare black hole accretion events, not unique host halos.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurement of galaxy environments around hyperluminous QSOs at high redshift, linking their black hole masses to typical galaxy host halos.
Findings
HLQSOs are in galaxy overdensities with velocity dispersion ~200 km/s.
Correlation lengths suggest HLQSOs inhabit halos of ~10^{12.3} M_sun.
Their rarity is due to rare accretion events, not unusual environments.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the galaxy distribution surrounding 15 of the most luminous (>10^{14} L_sun; M_1450 ~ -30) QSOs in the sky with z~2.7. Our data are drawn from the Keck Baryonic Structure Survey (KBSS). In this work, we use the positions and spectroscopic redshifts of 1558 galaxies that lie within ~3', (4.2 h^{-1} comoving Mpc; cMpc) of the hyperluminous QSO (HLQSO) sightline in one of 15 independent survey fields, together with new measurements of the HLQSO systemic redshifts. We measure the galaxy-HLQSO cross-correlation function, the galaxy-galaxy autocorrelation function, and the characteristic scale of galaxy overdensities surrounding the sites of exceedingly rare, extremely rapid, black hole accretion. On average, the HLQSOs lie within significant galaxy overdensities, characterized by a velocity dispersion sigma_v ~ 200 km s^{-1} and a transverse angular scale of ~25",…
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